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jo
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Posted: Mon Jun 04, 2007 10:32 pm |
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GruntPosts: 40Location: FinlandJoined: Tue Sep 05, 2006 3:49 pm
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i don't like bebo, i got excited about it when i joined but i use it like once in 3 months haha
i'm a myspace addict though, always using it and i think it's great, besides it easy and simple and stuff
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evans
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Posted: Mon Jun 04, 2007 10:42 pm |
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ModeratorPosts: 4789Location: Wolverhampton, UKJoined: Thu Aug 31, 2006 3:52 pm
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I got myspace, facebook and bebo, bebo is pretty shite, facebook is ok but i love myspace
_________________ Never try... Never fail |
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Error: User Not Found
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Posted: Mon Jun 04, 2007 11:59 pm |
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ModeratorPosts: 4509Joined: Tue Sep 05, 2006 5:37 am
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i've got a facebook and myspace i dun even know what bebo is lol
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TMWKTM
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Posted: Tue Jun 05, 2007 5:49 am |
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Bebo's kinda lame. Not enough people use it. If they had more users it would be alright.
Myspace is good for certain things. You can personalize your profile the best on there and sooo many people are on it. Music bands/artists pages are really good. Literally every single band is on Myspace. It's practically a given that you MUST be on Myspace if you're a band. The drawbacks are the endless spamming and constant errors you get on the site.
Facebook is really great, but it depends on what area you live in. One thing you'll see with Facebook is that it's extremely popular in certain areas, and not in others. For example, Toronto, where I live has one of the highest number of Facebook users in the entire world, so if you live in Toronto it's great. The good thing is that you can find your real friends, unlike Myspace. It's crazy, my BEST friend when I was a kid who I hadn't seen in like 15 years found me on there and it turned out he was a big D&B head too and we were both going to see Pendulum like a week later, so we met up and went to the show. Crazyness! I think you also appreciate it too when you're older (say 21+) b/c there's so many people you haven't seen in years from high school or an old job.
It's really good too if you have a bunch of people from the same group/network like the same school or job that are all on it. Everyone from my school is always messaging each other on that thing 24/7 lol. Like I said, Facebook is kind of regional-specific. Seriously, in Toronto all you hear is people talking about Facebook. If you go out with friends, a party, a bar, somehow Facebook always comes up "OMG did you see that pic of _____ on Facebook"? lol Facebook's also really good for Events since you can add photos and invite people and see who's coming, etc.
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Agent Orange
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Posted: Tue Jun 05, 2007 6:13 am |
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The Orange AuthorityPosts: 4748Location: NetherlandsJoined: Tue Aug 29, 2006 6:39 pm
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I have a myspace, don't care about Bebo or Facebook. In fact, I haven't even heard of those two. I'll just stick with Myspace, 'cause for one: I can find new music easily and two: some of my friends are on it. Too bad myspace is filling up with moaning and complaining people. Some people are fucked up there You know when you try to send a useful or helping comment about trouble someone is having, and they'll reply saying 'it's none of your bussiness.' Then fucking stop spreading your shit to random people. But other than that, yeah. Myspace. Cool. While it lasts.
_________________ Spammers got 99 problems 'till the day they die. :thumbsup: |
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TMWKTM
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Posted: Sat Jun 30, 2007 8:05 pm |
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Here's an article on Facebook from our Toronto newspaper. Like I said, it totally depends on what city you live in. If you live somewhere like Toronto where everyone's on it, it's fun. If you live somewhere that doesn't have a lot of users it will probably be boring for you.
http://www.thestar.com/article/231008
Why is T.O. the capital of Facebook?
Toronto claims more members of the popular social networking site than any other city in the world and it's not just because we're geeks Jun 30, 2007 04:30 AM Alexandra Shimo Special to the Star
Facebook, that ubiquitous social networking tool, has not been kind to Torontonian Roger Rai this month. A couple of weeks ago, after dining at high-end Kultura, Rai went for a few drinks at trendy Lobby. Yet when questioned by his girlfriend about the evening's activities, Rai said he had gone straight home after dinner.
"But my girlfriend had seen photos of me on Facebook at Lobby," he explains. "I was so busted."
Busted, addicted and obsessed are three words that capture Toronto's relationship to the popular Internet site. As a city, we have more members than New York, Los Angeles and San Francisco combined. Thirteen per cent of Torontonians have signed up.
We not only have more members than any other city – 670,038 as of this week– we have more groups within the site talking about the goings on of our town.
There are forums devoted to Toronto's island airport. Others have formed to chat about last weekend's Pride festivities, or how Toronto comedy is faring. In total, there are more than 350 groups of people dedicated to discussing different aspects of the TTC – whether it's okay to eat on it, how to do gymnastics in subways and whether tickets are overpriced. There are so many groups devoted to the minutia of Toronto that the magazine Spacing recently launched an online forum called Facebook Fridays, which highlights and reviews the best pages to visit.
"There are so many groups that we wanted to tell people which ones were worth checking into," says Matthew Blackett, publisher of Spacing. "Facebook has become a wonderful public forum – it's unbelievable."
But why is Toronto, more than any other place, so besotted with Facebook? It's hard to untangle, says Andy Walker, a technology writer, and author of The Absolute Beginners Guide to Security, Spam, Spyware and Viruses. A number of explanations stand out, he says.
One reason is that our city is technologically wired; Toronto has one of the highest penetrations of the Internet in the world. Another is our salaries, he adds. Torontonians have high disposable incomes compared with most other Canadians. We make almost 20 per cent more ($35,618) than the national average ($29,769).
With more money, we can afford broadband connection and the fast computers that make Facebook more enjoyable and easier to run.
"We tend to be early adopters of new technologies," explains Walker, who met his current girlfriend through Facebook, and says he's addicted to the site. "We are a city of gadget freaks and Internet geeks, so, of course, we are into Facebook."
Social class could also play a role, says Chris Thompson, a former Torontonian and technology writer who now lives in New York. Recent research from the United States suggests that people pick their social networking sites along class lines.
Facebook users are more likely to come from families that emphasize education and going to college, according to Danah Boyd, a researcher at the University of California. By contrast, Myspace members are more likely to come from poorer or working class backgrounds, Boyd found.
If social class plays a role, Facebook is the obvious choice for the city, says Thompson who writes for The New York Times magazine and other publications. Torontonians are more likely to be well educated than residents of most other North American cities, with higher numbers going to post-secondary education.
"Facebook started out focusing exclusively on the university population," he says. "Toronto is a huge university town, with four major universities and a number of smaller ones, so it makes sense that it would take off in the city."
Once numbers have reached a certain mass, the booming popularity can become a self-fulfilling phenomenon. This concept is known as the tipping point, and it refers to that critical moment when growth explodes.
It's a subject that comes up often – a number of on-line discussion boards have surfaced that talk about this phenomenon in Toronto. Jason McBride, co-editor of uTOpia: Towards a New Toronto, and avid Facebook user, believes the site recently reached that critical mass.
A number of people who resisted the first Facebook wave are just joining now, he says. "The fact that everyone in Toronto is on encourages them to join. It's like with email or cell phones."
As an online roundtable for civic engagement, Facebook has no parallels, Blackett says. But the site serves the city in other ways, too. Last month, Crime Stoppers used the site to target people who might have information on the death of Jordan Manners.
After the 15-year-old was shot and killed in May, police wrote on several pages that had sprouted up in Jordan's memory, asking people to get in contact if they had any information about the murder. The Ontario Provincial Police have also used the site to check up on parties where there might be underage drinking or drugs. There are even reports of officers arriving at the scene of the crime with directions to the illegal party printed from the pages of Facebook.
"Once you figure out how it works, it can be quite an effective tool for reaching a lot of people really fast," says Constable Scott Mills, with the Crime Stoppers program.
The site is so popular that City of Toronto employees were banned from using it while at work last month. The ban was necessary, officials announced, to remove the temptation to waste "an inordinate amount of time".
For 36-year-old Rai, the surging popularity of the site has very real, immediate personal consequences. The animation producer says it is difficult to go out in the city without someone snapping a photo and posting it on their Facebook account.
A minor irritation perhaps, but the Facebook phenomenon has meant an unfortunate loss of privacy, he says.
"Someone will come up to me and ask, were you at the Drake on Tuesday, and I'll say; `How did you know?' It turns out they've seen me in a photo where I've been tagged. People end up knowing exactly what I'm up to whether I like it or not. It's a wonderful tool but it leaves you so exposed."
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Cogglesz
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Posted: Sun Jul 01, 2007 12:15 pm |
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GeneralPosts: 6933Location: Scotland UKJoined: Wed May 23, 2007 2:57 pm
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i've got both bebo and myspace but i herd ages ago on the news that myspace had the most users followed by bebo which is then followed by facebook
i thought it was only people in the uk that use bebo
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